Bilal9
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Countries which are developing now will not have the exact same development strategy as those developed countries who was developing in 1960s. They focused on heavy industry and metallurgy because that was the only path to transform a big or medium sized country from the subsistence agricultural economy to advanced economy.Then service sector was a tiny component of the economy, the world was not much integrated, world financial sector was much much smaller, information and communication technology was non existent. Now we have so many way to propel our growth. So, rapid flourishment of heavy industry is welcome, but that does not mean we can't achieve high growth without emphasizing it at least up to higher middle income status.We sure need heavy industry to become a fully developed country. Most of the countries which emphasized on heavy industry are rich in Iron, Coal, Oil etc(exception being Japan, South Korea but that was the time when they have no other choice other than to imitate other mineral rich countries). So the most logical path of them to set the development course was to go for heavy industry.
Currently how Bangladesh is trying to advance the economy with mix of industry(slow but steady push from labor intensive light and medium sized industry towards heavy industry), information and communication technology, retail sector, construction, service sector is looking good to me for at least another 20 years. India is 10 times larger economy than BD, plus rich in Iron ore and Coal, so they could focused on heavy industry from early stage despite being a very poor country. Because economic scale was there. Some bozos here are constantly comparing Indian economic set up with that of Bangladesh forgetting the size difference, resource endowment and other things.Or comparing the development course of Japan, South Korea and Germany forgetting the different timescale.To them heavy industry is the one and only path of Nirvana in this year of 2018.
Great write-up - Thanks.
Although I'd still posit that we need at least one nominal defense industry like Heavy Industries Taxila in Pakistan which boasts a specialized alloy foundry and heavy forging, rolling and steel plate forming expertise. That single organization has been crucial in supplying numerous Pakistani defense product lines, especially armor parts, even some for their naval and missile needs. Armor items production is one sector (other than naval vessels) where self-sufficiency is a desired factor for a nation our size.
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